Halloween Ghosts and Candy

Updated on October 24, 2008
N.D. asks from Carson City, NV
14 answers

I am dreading the entire "trick or treat" thing this year LOL!! With three kids who are old enough to partake in this sugar high tradtition, the amount of candy that will be at my house in a thirty minute time frame will be horrid LOL. I started a tradition with my oldest when she was about 3 and have carried in on for six years and with the addition of her two little brothers. We have a Holloween Ghost who comes to the house 3 days after the holiday and will exchange all the candy for a toy! I am no longer sure where I heard this, but would like to know if anyone can tell me where this Halloween Ghost started and if there is any one else out there who has the ghost come to thier house. Thank you all and have a wonderful start to the holiday season.

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A.J.

answers from Los Angeles on

N.

We have the Halloween Ghost come as well. My kids get tickled pink over it just like Santa! They are 9 and 8 and still do this with me!
My old Nanny told me aboutt he Halloween Ghost and we have been doing this for 6 years!
Good luck! Also to keep my kids out of their candy while trick or treating we fill them up with their absolute favorite dinner and we do Ice cream before going out. Their tummy's are so full they have no room for the sugary treats

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M.F.

answers from Reno on

my sister in law does something similar and has the switch witch come and swap out the candy for a toy.

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D.E.

answers from San Diego on

Hi N.,

The "Great Pumpkin" started coming to our house last year (happily reinforced by "It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown"). Our son has been talking about the G.P. for weeks now--he is very excited about the surprise that the G.P. will leave him (a book and a small toy).

Happy Halloween!
:-) D.

P.S. FYI--I've given out small toys (Playdoh, spider rings, superballs, stickers, pencils, etc.) for the last several years, in addition to candy. The toys always disappear long before the candy does. The bigger kids especially like the toys!

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J.S.

answers from Los Angeles on

Oh my gosh! I've never heard of this, but I am sooo doing it! What a great idea! Thanks.

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S.A.

answers from Honolulu on

LOL, never heard of that before but it's a cute idea! ;) I'll have to use that when my daughter is old enough :)

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J.C.

answers from Los Angeles on

I don't know the origin of the idea. I heard it from someone in my mommy and me class last year.
Our version is the "Trick or Treat Fairy" and she comes on Halloween night. She also leaves a toy in place of the candy.
It works wonderfully.

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M.C.

answers from Los Angeles on

My son is a "candy-o-holic", but knows that he can not keep all his stash. I don't believe in taking it all away - they have to learn moderation. We go through it and first he picks out what he doesn't like and then we go through what he wants to keep and get rid of some of the excess. ex: if he gets 6 tootsie rolls - he only get to keep 3. Then he has a bucket for these "treats". As for the rest...most of the schools do a "Candy Split" and the kids bring in their candy to give to a charity. Ours go to an organization on skid row. The kids are heppy to help other people in need. Also Operation Gratitude is collecting candy for our troops.

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N.W.

answers from Los Angeles on

For many years, we've had the "Great Pumpkin" come to our house. After my daughter gets home from trick or treating, she gets to keep a small amount of her favorite candies, which we then monitor and distribute over the coming weeks and months, and then we put the rest in a bag on the front doorstep with a note. The next morning she either gets a coupon or a gift card from any number of places (i.e. target, build-a-bear, Barnes & Noble, etc. for like $10.00) and then she can spend it how she wants on a special gift for herself. Sure helps from having tons of candy around the house.

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C.D.

answers from Los Angeles on

I have no clue where the tradition came from, but I think that it's awesome! I think it's important for kids to always have the fun tradition of Halloween, but the Halloween Ghost concept should make them feel like they're getting two for one - brilliant!

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T.R.

answers from Los Angeles on

We do about the same thing and it's called the Switch Witch. They write down what they want her to bring, three things......the more candy the bigger the switch!!!!

They love it, they may eat one or two pieces but then it's all for the Switch Witch!!

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R.H.

answers from Los Angeles on

We have the "Great Pumpkin" too. My older son gets to pick out 10 pcs of candy. The baby, of course, will give all of his to the Great Pumpkin. Which, I'm embarassed to say, all goes to mommy's office candy dish!

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J.L.

answers from San Diego on

Hi N., I never heard of that, but what my husband and I did when our kids waswe kept their haloween buckets on top of the fridge, and then just let them have a couple pieces a day, and made sure they brushed their teeth afterwards and that worked for us. J. L.

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S.H.

answers from Honolulu on

Well, for us, it is their "Aunty" that comes by, and tells the kids to choose a few candies they want to keep, then the rest is going to be "donated" to people who don't have treats.... it works for us! Or we literally tell them, put aside some to keep, and the rest we just throw away. And if they eat too much, the "cavities" like it, and "we don't want to feed cavities..."
LOL.

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J.W.

answers from Reno on

It's probably like Santa Clause. A parent dresses up like a ghost.

Another suggestion, is to take the candy, and give the children only one a day. That way they don't eat it all at once and it can be monitored.

J.

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